Woolworth vs. Wal-Mart
Woolworth's has a long relationship with Wal-Mart, and in recent years has attempted to compete with Wal-Mart as a low-cost provider by adopting of some Wal-Mart's supply chain efficiencies and pricing practices. This paper will analyze strategic decision-making at Woolworth's and compare it to that at Wal-Mart in order to gain an understanding of how each of these companies is run. There will also be a section in this paper about the nature of decision-making at each of these companies.
According to Michael Porter's typology, Wal-Mart is a cost leader and this drives virtually everything that the company does in terms of its operations (QuickMBA.com, 2010). The company supports its strategy by leveraging its buying power over suppliers and by using economies of scale to win efficiencies throughout its supply chain (Alagse, 2011). Woolworth's has in recent years begun to compete using that same strategy, after finding itself somewhere in the middle between being a differentiated provider and a cost leader. Greenhalgh (2007, 1) notes that Woolworth's has adopted the supply chain efficiency and intense negotiations to reduce the gross margin, both hallmarks of Wal-Mart's strategy. While Wal-Mart has long been an innovator in the field of cost reduction retail, Woolworth's in a relatively newcomer, mirroring the development of the retail business in Australia as well (Ibid).
Wal-Mart undertook its strategy as a means of growing its market. The BCG Matrix (NetMBA.com, 2010) allows for businesses to be compared in terms of their characteristics. Wal-Mart has always viewed its business as a star, characterized by high growth and high relative market share. Once Wal-Mart became a dominant player, it began...
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